This paper reports on research into Irish women writers of children’s literature which was conducted as part of the UCD Irish Virtual Research Library and Archive (IVRLA) series of demonstrator research projects. The research focuses on the period from 1870 to 1940 and uses both the Manning Collection of children’s books in UCD and the Máirín Cregan papers at the National Library of Ireland. The report focuses on the issue of creating a virtual space for the specific consideration of children’s literature written by women – a space which has been created by the project’s online exhibition collection of extracts from relevant writers and useful reference material. The issues encountered in selecting material for this collection are considere...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [271]-281).This dissertation evaluates the work of two wo...
At the turn of the twentieth-century, Katharine Tynan was one of the most famous Irish writers, both...
We would like to express our gratitude to all our invited peer-reviewers for their generous and time...
This paper reports on research into Irish women writers of children’s literature which was conducted...
This paper reports on the Ireland Life-Writing project which was conducted as part of the UCD Irish ...
Irish women writers entered the British and international publishing scene in unprecedented numbers ...
This thesis is concerned with advancing our knowledge of Irish children’s reading in the first two d...
This paper reports on the Folklore Schools 1937-38 project which was conducted as part of the UCD Ir...
This thesis examines the role that Irish children fulfilled in an emergent Irish advertising and con...
This thesis focuses on the novels written and published by expatriate Irish women resident in Britai...
This paper reports on research into the history and library of the Royal College of Science for Irel...
This paper reports on research into Austin Clarke’s personal library which was conducted as part of ...
Writing Ireland\u27s Wrongs: Nineteenth-Century Women, Politics and Violence retrieves the rhetorica...
This article takes as its main focus the current collaboration between JSTOR and Field Day to digiti...
Dorothea Herbert was an Irish provincial writer who did not publish during her lifetime. Only three ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [271]-281).This dissertation evaluates the work of two wo...
At the turn of the twentieth-century, Katharine Tynan was one of the most famous Irish writers, both...
We would like to express our gratitude to all our invited peer-reviewers for their generous and time...
This paper reports on research into Irish women writers of children’s literature which was conducted...
This paper reports on the Ireland Life-Writing project which was conducted as part of the UCD Irish ...
Irish women writers entered the British and international publishing scene in unprecedented numbers ...
This thesis is concerned with advancing our knowledge of Irish children’s reading in the first two d...
This paper reports on the Folklore Schools 1937-38 project which was conducted as part of the UCD Ir...
This thesis examines the role that Irish children fulfilled in an emergent Irish advertising and con...
This thesis focuses on the novels written and published by expatriate Irish women resident in Britai...
This paper reports on research into the history and library of the Royal College of Science for Irel...
This paper reports on research into Austin Clarke’s personal library which was conducted as part of ...
Writing Ireland\u27s Wrongs: Nineteenth-Century Women, Politics and Violence retrieves the rhetorica...
This article takes as its main focus the current collaboration between JSTOR and Field Day to digiti...
Dorothea Herbert was an Irish provincial writer who did not publish during her lifetime. Only three ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [271]-281).This dissertation evaluates the work of two wo...
At the turn of the twentieth-century, Katharine Tynan was one of the most famous Irish writers, both...
We would like to express our gratitude to all our invited peer-reviewers for their generous and time...